System and method for locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information

ABSTRACT

A system and methods for locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information. The system comprises a computer having a display; a keeper data structure; and software executable within the computer adapted to allow a user to associate a predetermined computer data file with a keeper selectively visible on the display. Keepers are created in response to data in a related keeper data structure and further comprise a tab section. A user retrieves a file associated with a selected visual image in the keeper.

RELATION TO PRIOR APPLICATIONS

The present application is a continuation-in-part of, and claims priority in part through, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/298,963, filed Dec. 9, 2005, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,209,922 which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/021,521, filed on Oct. 29, 2001 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,181,465.

FIELD OF INVENTION

The inventions relate to the field of information management. More specifically, in an exemplary embodiment, a system and method of operation for personalization of categorization of information and summaries of larger documents and other data are claimed. The inventions are further related to a system and method for locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information. In an embodiment, the inventions more specifically relate to a system and method for locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information in the form of files stored on local persistent data stores such as hard drives, on other persistent data stores such as hard drives such as local area network hard drives, on the Internet, or the like, or a combination thereof.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Knowledge base management tools are similar to data-mining and search tools. Data mining focuses on so-called legacy data that is more transactional and financial in nature. For example, a massive database of sales figures can reveal trends or allow a user to “drill down” to specific territories, products, and customers. Search tools may ferret out information known to be possibly present, but do not necessarily reveal anything inherent in the data. Knowledge base management tools go a step further by enabling a user to collect and organize information, search for what the user needs, and share the user's findings with others.

In the art, most data provision services—i.e., search or data retrieval services—provide a set interface to their data. A user may only manipulate that interface in a manner dictated by the provider. For example, a user wishing to access services such as the LEXIS/NEXIS™ service which is provided by a division of Reed-Elsevier, Inc. or WESTLAW™ operated by the West Group may use software that resides at a user computer and that has access to data either resident on a CDROM, a hard drive local to the user computer's environment, or via a data communications network such as the Internet. Other users may access those services directly through the Internet. Many information sources do not provide a user level taxonomy at all, relying, if at all, on an Internet browser or other software to provide some user level utility to organize information, e.g. once data are accessed, storage of the data is limited by the browser or operating system to folders and searching within folders limited as well.

A problem that exists with these access methods is that the means and ability to categorize the data accessed is dictated by the provider. For example, WESTLAW uses its proprietary head notes taxonomy that WESTLAW alone maintains and creates. Educational services such as ERIC provide a rigid classification system.

For many users, these taxonomies are either inadequate because they are not tailorable to the user's specific needs or ignored because they represent a view of categorization with which the user is neither familiar nor inclined to learn or use. Moreover, given the level of current art searching methods, use of the provider supplied and imposed taxonomy is not as attractive for searching as it may have once been.

However, many users would benefit from an ability to categorize and organize data in a manner comfortable to that user, and perhaps to that user alone. Such capability will aid that user in accessing the data, extracting information relevant to that user from that data, and later retrieving that information rapidly and cost-effectively. A problem with such categorization is that such an ability may incur large support costs or be impracticably unwieldy.

As is known in the art, so called knowledge bases may comprise an indexed, searchable set of queries or frequently asked questions (FAQs) coupled with a search engine. Some methods proposed in the prior art deal with mining generalized sequential patterns from large databases of raw data, taking into account user specified constraints such as taxonomies. U.S. Pat. No. 5,742,811 issued to Agrawal, et al. for “METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR MINING GENERALIZED SEQUENTIAL PATTERNS IN A LARGE DATABASE” is illustrative.

The prior art also has much written on queries of databases. U.S. Pat. No. 5,826,260 issued to Byrd, Jr., et al. for “INFORMATION RETRIEVAL SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR DISPLAYING AND ORDERING INFORMATION BASED ON QUERY ELEMENT CONTRIBUTION” is illustrative and teaches an information retrieval system wherein a query issued by a user is analyzed by a query engine into query elements. After the query has been evaluated against the document collections, a resulting hit list is presented to the user, e.g., as a table. The presented hit list displays not only an overall rank of a document but also a contribution of each query element to the rank of the document. The user can reorder the hit list by prioritizing the contribution of individual query elements to override the overall rank and by assigning additional weight(s) to those contributions. However, the prior art has not adequately addressed using queries as a method of capturing, condensing, and presenting raw data or its summarization according to a user defined, user configurable taxonomy.

In addition, the prior art teaches methods of summarization of raw data. U.S. Pat. No. 5,918,240 issued to Kupiec, et al. for “AUTOMATIC METHOD OF EXTRACTING SUMMARIZATION USING FEATURE PROBABILITIES” is illustrative. Kupiec teaches a method of automatically generating document extracts that makes use of feature value probabilities generated from a statistical analysis of manually generated summaries to extract the same set of sentences an expert might. The method is based upon an iterative approach. However, Kupiec does not disclose and does not teach, suggest, or motivate towards use of a user tailorable taxonomy when doing its summarization or association of the generated summarization with one or more elements in the taxonomy.

Accordingly, there is a need for a user configurable interface comprising raw data, information summarized and derived from the raw data, and a user defined and maintained taxonomy to organize the information.

One area with there is such a need is in interfacing to the Internet or similar wide area communications network, generally accomplished using a browser. Every Internet browser currently has an ability to maintain a so-called “favorites” list. Generally these may be accessed via a drop-down menu item and may further take the appearance of a folder hierarchy as will be familiar to current personal computer operator systems. These “favorite” systems have numerous problems when in normal use. Several of these problems are shown here as exemplary.

First, they are constrained to hypertext meta-language (HTML) files and are not for general use, e.g. local non-HTML files. Second, they have no ability to be used as search constraints. Third, they have no ability to provide a view to a user of the content of the HTML file to which they refer. Fourth, they have no ability to cache an HTML file and/or compare the cached version with a current version of that file. Fifth, they have no ability to more-or-less simultaneously associate a file with a plurality of entries in the favorites list.

Additionally, some browsers now allow tabbed display pages, but these are merely a convenience to the user as each tabbed display page is merely a clone of any other tabbed display page and offers no inherent organizational benefit to accessing or otherwise organizing access to information, either locally or remotely or both.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become more fully apparent from the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings in which:

FIG. 1 is a schematic view of an exemplary embodiment of the system of the present inventions;

FIG. 2 is a schematic object-like view of organization of table elements of an exemplary embodiment of the system of the present inventions;

FIG. 3 is an exemplary taxonomy screen form;

FIG. 4 is an exemplary data entry screen showing entry by authority for a legal system;

FIG. 5 is an exemplary data entry screen showing entry by taxonomy element for a legal system;

FIG. 6 is an exemplary screen showing a form useful for searching of the summaries and authorities;

FIG. 7 is an exemplary screen showing a form useful for entry and searching of questions and FAQs;

FIGS. 8 and 9 are flowcharts of an exemplary embodiment of the system of the present inventions;

FIG. 10 is a schematic overview of an exemplary display illustrating keepers and tabbed display pages;

FIG. 11 is a schematic overview of an keeper data structure;

FIG. 12 is an exemplary display; and

FIG. 13 is a schematic overview of an exemplary display showing a null member association tabbed display page.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

In general, throughout this description, if an item is described as implemented in software, it can equally well be implemented as hardware. Further, although numerous examples herein are described in terms of legal research, the present inventions are not limited by these exemplary embodiments but instead are limited only by claims.

Referring now to FIG. 1, the system and method of the present invention are scalable, as that term is understood by those of ordinary skill in the database arts. Database 22 may reside solely at server 20 or be distributed among the various computers 10,20,30,40. A first portion 200 (shown in FIG. 2) of database 22 may comprise captured raw data, referred to herein as “authority” data, where these raw data are typically captured into authority table 22 a, and a second portion 300 (shown in FIG. 2) of database 22 may comprise user manipulatable data, referred to herein as “summary” data, typically in summary table 12 b associated with computer 10. As will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the computer arts, database 22 may comprise a single database such as database 22 at server 20 or be distributed to include database 12 at computer 10.

As will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the computer arts, general data may be thought of as “raw data,” unprocessed and/or not reduced into a condensed form. Raw data that are condensed and/or organized according to some schema may be thought of as “information,” able to be understood and acted upon. By way of example and not limitation, a legal decision issued in written form by a court may contain hundreds of words, some of which describe the background of the issues before that court, some of which synopsize prior case or statutory law which may apply to the facts of the case, and some of which define and discuss the holding of the court on the issues before that court. In this example, all the words of the written decision may be thought of as “raw data” but the two or three sentences within the decision that define the holding of the court on an issue may be what a user wishes to know and use, i.e. the “information” of the decision for that user.

By way of further example, text documents and webpages may also be raw data as may blueprints, wiring diagrams, or the like useful in building projects or maintenance and troubleshooting operations.

In many situations, the same raw data may be “mined” or synopsized by different users for different information. By way of further example and not limitation, a report of weather trends may be considered “raw data.” A first user may view the raw weather data for temperature trends important to a building industry. A second user may view the raw weather data for rainfall trends important to a farming industry. Each user therefore uses the same raw data to mine different information.

As used herein, “authority” is understood to mean any source of information and may comprise at least one of text data, graphics data, audio data, video data, and the like, or combinations thereof. Authority data may comprise documents such as documents, images, and the like. Authority data may further comprise references to the actual data, such as a URL or other file link. In an exemplary legal application, the documents may further comprise case law files, statutes, and court rules. Accordingly, by way of example and not limitation, authority table 22 a may comprise at least one of legal data, medical data, educational data, manufacturing data, scientific data, and/or entertainment data. In a preferred embodiment, the actual raw data are captured for inclusion in authority table 22 a such as in a memo field as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in so-called x-Base database software. However, a pointer or other reference may be captured instead or in combination, such as a file location on server 20 or an Internet URL reference.

In the preferred embodiment, each entry in each authority table 22 a, described herein as an “authority,” will have a unique identifier such as a primary key value. Further, in a preferred embodiment, each authority may be identified by one or more keywords that may reside in an authority keywords table 22 b associated with backend portion 200 (shown in FIG. 2). Authority keywords table 22 b may be accessed using table software object 220 b (shown in FIG. 2). Each element of authority keywords table 22 b has a link back to authority table 22 a from which that keyword was derived and may further comprise so-called pinpoint descriptors to identify the precise location in the authority associated with or resident in authority table 22 a from which the keyword was derived.

By way of example and not limitation, a text file is captured into authority table 22 a and may be parsed according to any of a number of equivalent methods to tokenize or otherwise summarize the text file. Each token or summary identifier identified may be captured into an element in an associated authority keyword table 22 b where the element in that table 22 b for that token comprises a word offset from a given, known starting point, e.g. the beginning of the text document, where that token exists. By way of further example and not limitation, a user may arbitrarily associate one or more authority keywords with a file captured into or identified in an authority table 22 a, such as a geographic location in a graphic file or a time sequence identifier for audio or audiovisual data. Additionally, in some currently envisioned alternative embodiments, authorities may be translated into a different language upon or after capture. Additionally still, the translation may occur on the fly using any one of numerous equivalent methods or software as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the software arts and translations may be kept in authority table 22 a and linked to each other to facilitate use.

Accordingly, as discussed below, second portion 300 (shown in FIG. 2) of database 22 comprises user tailorable tables. These tables comprise information and configuration data relevant to that user. In some instances the user tailorable tables may be shared between users, and in other instances the user tailorable tables may be distinct and not shared. By way of further example and not limitation, mechanics diagnosing engine problems for automobiles may wish to have access to the repair manuals for those automobiles as will those who repair air conditioner systems for those automobiles, although each of them will usually be interested in different subsets of the data contained in those repair manuals.

Although database 22 and its first portion 200 and second portion 300 (both shown in FIG. 2) may be two or more databases, as that term is understood by those of ordinary skill in the database arts, in this document database 22, including its first portion 200 and its second portion 300, will be referred to as a single database. In an exemplary embodiment where the user and backend portions of the database co-reside, database 22 may be a single database. Further, in some currently envisioned embodiments, authority data may be raw data and not resident in a table. By way of example and not limitation, in an embodiment where the present invention is configured at least partially as an Internet browser with some portion of the authority data being accessible via the Internet such as via HTML or XML web pages using numerous means including Internet search engines.

All of the software (not shown in FIG. 1) as well as database 22 may reside at a single computer, e.g. database 62 at computer 60 resident on a hard drive or optical storage device. Further, personal digital assistant 50 may have database 22 such as a solid state memory device insertable into and useable by personal digital assistant 50.

In an alternative embodiment, a user or client portion of the software may reside at user computer 10, laptop 30, or personal digital assistant 50 with a backend portion remaining at server 20. In this scenario, user computer 10, laptop 30, or personal digital assistant 50 may communicate with server 20 via wired or wireless networks such as local area network 110 and/or via the Internet 100. In a similar manner, a portion of database 22 may be present remotely from server 20 such as database 12 or database 42. These other databases 12,42 may be separate from database 22 and may remain independent from or linked to database 22 by methods that will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the database arts.

A backend software component (not shown in FIG. 1) may be present to handle access to database 22. Additionally, in its various embodiments, a user/client portion of the software (not shown in FIG. 1) may be present to provide an interface to database 22 that remains constant with access remaining transparent to the user. In a currently preferred embodiment, access to database 22 may be accomplished by using object oriented programming techniques in which data access is encapsulated in table software objects (generally referred to as “210” and “310” in FIG. 2) with a user front end programmed in C++ or HTML or the like. Each table software object, e.g. 12 a, 22 a, may therefore be abstracted at the user front end. These table software objects may handle accessing tables locally, via a local area network, via a wide area network, or a combination thereof, and use protocols such as data access objects (DAO), Universal Data Access (UDA), Remote Data Objects (RDO), ActiveX Data Objects (ADO), direct access, DCOM, ODBC, SQL, or the like, or a combination thereof, without having to change the user front end. Such abstraction, as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the software programming arts, allows the present inventions to have an inherent scalability, as these terms will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the software arts.

As will be discussed herein below, the user interface allows a user to tailor various aspects of the user/client portion of the system to that user's desires and needs. In an embodiment, the inherent scalability of the present inventions will allow use of a browser or browser-like user front end exploiting HTML pages for menus and providing other user functions while using table software objects to access database 22 and backend functionality. Accordingly, in addition to the various functions described herein, back-end portion 200 (shown in FIG. 2) of the present inventions may be configured to allow the Internet to act as a portion of authority table 22 a. Searches may therefore be accomplished using the search functions of the present inventions coupled with search facilities present via the Internet. Summaries may be generated from the Internet sources and stored locally according to the user's taxonomy.

Further, the system may be used to provide selected users with access to one or more functions via the Internet. Using HTML, a user may sign in through an HTML user interface. In a currently preferred embodiment, the HTML user interface receives a temporary “cookie” from server 30 which is good only for the current session and is destroyed or otherwise deactivated when the current session ends or a predetermined inactivity timeout has occurred. Additionally, the sign-in process may require that the user first read and acknowledge a disclaimer similar to an end user license agreement. If the user rejects the disclaimer, a “cookie” will not be issued and, without the cookie, the user will be denied access to the system.

Once access to the system has been granted, the user may be allowed access to predetermined system functionality such as to the frequently asked questions or in user question/FAQ table 12 c. Should the user wish to access additional functionality, e.g. fee-based functions, the user may then be presented with a request for payment such as with a form requesting payment via credit card (not shown in the figures). Once payment has been verified, the user may be issued an access code and password which will allow access to predetermined fee-based sections of the system. This access code and password may additionally be required for future access to the fee-based sections of the system. However, direct access to predetermined functionality may be disallowed until a user first accesses the system in the normal manner and acknowledges a disclaimer.

In some currently envisioned embodiments, user anonymity is essential and may be assured by the use of one or more third party companies, such as those that handle credit card verification and subsequent funds transfer. In order to maintain anonymity, users to the additional functions may be assigned a discreet code such as an alphanumeric password code which shall be used as an identifier to track their queries and subsequent system responses. All communications between the system and these users may then occur through the user interface using this password code as the primary contact identifier. In certain embodiments, the password code may only be valid for the then current session, helping assure that no direct contact occurs between the a user and the system operators.

Additionally, the present inventions may be accessible with or through additional software, by way of example and not limitation including operating systems, such as by a user or programmatically invocable service or a shortcut-key service, e.g. ALT-K; application systems, such as word processors, work flow processors, project planners, case mangers; and the like, or combinations thereof. Such embodiments may allow a user of another software application such as a word processor to utilize that other application while conducting searches and constructing documents or gathering other data from the system of the present inventions.

As discussed above, in an alternative embodiment, the present inventions may be used in conjunction with a service that maintains authority table 22 a. Server 30 is accessible to a user such as a laptop 30 or personal digital assistant 50 having appropriate access. As each such user researches or otherwise captures new authorities, server 30 may maintain either the authority raw data or a link to the authority raw data according to the teachings of the present inventions. If server 30 is accessible via the Internet 100, server 30 may be made available to a plurality of users on a general or selective basis, such as an open or free service, a for-fee service, a service limited to a community of users, and the like, or combinations thereof. Thus, research by one user, e.g. laptop 30, can inure to the benefit of all users, e.g. computer 10 and personal digital assistant 50, because authority table 22 a grows with each user's additions and each authority so added may be made available such as via searches to all users. Although each user 30,50 may be allowed their own customized view of the authority data, e.g. their separate taxonomy tables 12 a, all share the same source, i.e. authority table 22 a.

Referring now to FIG. 2, in the currently preferred embodiment, database 22 may comprise two major sections, 200 and 300. As will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the database arts, a database in general may comprise tables and possibly other components such as views and reports. In this exemplary embodiment, backend portion 200 of database 22 comprises at least one authority table 22 a, where authority table 22 a may be accessible via table software object 210 a, and user portion 300 comprises at least one summary table 12 b, where summary table 12 b may be accessible via table software object 310 a. Both these tables may be free tables, associated with the same database such as database 22, or associated with different databases. However, in an exemplary embodiment where the user and backend functions co-reside in a computer, all tables may be associated with a single database such as database 22.

User portion 300 of database 22 comprises at least one user tailorable summary table 12 b that may be accessible via table software object 310 b and may comprise other user tailorable tables. In additional exemplary embodiments, one or more of these tables may be related to other entities, by way of example and not limitation including clients, client matters, resources, and the like, such as for use in billing, case management, work flow management, project planner, and the like, or combinations thereof.

User taxonomy table 12 a may be part of user portion 300 and contains user defined categorizations as well as relationships between each member of taxonomy table 12 a to others in taxonomy table 12 a. In a currently preferred embodiment, user taxonomy table 12 a is organized as a linked list where each taxonomy element, sometimes referred to herein as a “category,” has a parent link value. However, individual elements of taxonomy 12 a or entire groups of elements, e.g. branches of a hierarchically organized taxonomy table 12 a, may be associated with or related to one or more other members or groups of taxonomy 12 a as described more fully herein below.

User summary table 12 b may be part of user portion 300 and contains an element for each item of information the user desires to link to at least one element in user taxonomy table 12 a. In the currently preferred embodiment, each element in user summary table 12 b, sometimes referred to herein as a “summary,” must be linked to at least one element in user taxonomy 12 a as well as to a single element in authority table 22 a in backend portion 200. User summary table index 12 f is associated with user summary table 12 b in part to aid in searching functions. One currently envisioned method of relating user summary table 12 b to authority table 22 a is to use an intermediate table such as user knowledge table 12 e which relates one element in authority table 22 a to one element in user summary table 12 b, although one-to-many relationships may be defined in this or other manners as well.

In an embodiment, user question/FAQ table 12 c may exist in user portion 300. User question/FAQ table 12 c may be used to contain organizational help queries or other user tailored condensations of data, e.g. serve as a container for a plurality of elements in user summary table 12 b. Each element in user question/FAQ table 12 c may be related to one or more entries in user knowledge table 12 e. User knowledge table 12 e, in turn, may be related to a plurality of elements in user summary table 12 b. In alternatively contemplated embodiments, user question/FAQ table 12 c and user knowledge table 12 e may be combined into a single table. Use of separate tables allows a single element of user question/FAQ table 12 c to have several elements in user knowledge table 12 e related to that element in user question/FAQ table 12 c, allowing a one-to-many relationship.

In a further aspect of the present inventions, user question/FAQ table 12 c may be reproduced as a report on a taxonomy element basis, e.g. with report table 12 d. In this manner, summaries captured such as in user summary table 12 b may be used in conjunction with user question/FAQ table 12 c and taxonomy table 12 a to create a user-based cylopedia or reference work.

Because user portion 300 may be separate from backend portion 200, a single backend authority table 22 a may be shared concurrently by numerous users, as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the database arts. Additionally, backend authority table 22 a may reside at some distance remote from the user. In such an environment, user portion 300 software may communicate with backend portion 200 services, such as via wireless or wired networks such as local area network 110 (FIG. 1) or the Internet 100 (FIG. 1). Linkage between backend portion 200 and user portion 300 may be by a unique key identifier such as to a unique authority table key value. Additionally, messaging between backend portion 200 and the user portion 300 may comprise short messages, easing communications bandwidth requirements.

In a currently envisioned embodiment, access to the system may be through numerous means, by way of example and not limitation including programs written for a specific database such as MICROSOFT VISUAL FOXPRO®, general languages such as C++ or C# that may also include an SQL or ODBC or equivalent interface ability, an HTML (hypertext markup language) or the like graphical interface, JAVA®, or the like, or combinations thereof. The user interface may thus be presented using an Internet browser or the like and may include access through the Internet. Additionally, one or more system functions may be executed from a persistent data storage device such as a hard disk, diskette, CDROM, e-prom, solid state device, or any other digital medium which can contain executable code and/or one or more portions of database 22.

Referring now to FIG. 3, in a preferred embodiment, logic in forms (such as from 350 shown in FIG. 3) used for presentation of data to the user may be decoupled from data access logic by use of table software objects such as 210, 310 to allow adapting a resource being accessed so that the type of resource can change easily and independently.

The user may acquire or otherwise access raw data for storage in authority table 22 a (FIG. 1) which may reside at a backend server such as server 30 (FIG. 1). By way of example and not limitation, the user may copy these files from another source such as through the Internet 100 (FIG. 1) or directly enter the authority information into authority table 22 a. In an exemplary embodiment, raw data may be input into authority table 22 a by selecting an option, in FIG. 3 shown as button 355 with a label of FULL TEXT, which then allows the user to copy the data or link into authority table 22 a.

Additionally, users may be allowed to switch between databases 22 as well. When a user switches, the context of the user's summaries and taxonomies may switch as well. However, a user may link taxonomy table 12 a to multiple authority tables 22 a, as well as multiple tables in user portion 300. In situations where a user computer has access to multiple databases 22, if the user deletes a taxonomy level in such a multiple context the deleted item may remain present in taxonomy table 12 a but would be disabled, e.g. grayed out, for the set of tables associated with the context in which the user deleted the item from taxonomy table 12 a. If the item from taxonomy table 12 a is associated with no further tables, that item may then be removed from the shared taxonomy table 12 a.

Referring now to FIG. 4, once raw data are entered into or accessed from authority table 22 a, a user may generate one or more summaries for each element of authority table 22 a in numerous equivalent ways as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the programming arts. However, a user may invoke an entry screen such as shown at 400 and use that screen to capture or access an authority which has not yet been captured. If the authority is not yet present in authority table 22 a, capturing the authority in this manner will, upon acceptance by the user such as with a button, capture that authority or its link into authority table 22 a.

By way of example and not limitation, the user may retrieve the previously entered element from authority table 12 a, view the raw data associated with that element, highlight or mark a section of the raw data to be captured, and signal a desire to capture the highlighted or marked section as a summary. This may be accomplished, by way of example and not limitation, by using a mouse to highlight the section and then using a right-button click of the mouse to bring up a menu that has an entry to allow capture. In this manner, for example, a capture function could additionally capture the reference parameters such as word offset information for captured text data. The user may additionally associate the captured summary with one or more elements in taxonomy table 12 a. Optionally, the user may create new elements in user taxonomy table 12 a for use with the summary. The user may additionally edit the summary data captured and/or replace or augment all or a portion of the summary with whatever the user wishes, by way of example and not limitation including audio augmentation, video augmentation, and the like.

Summary information may be shown such as at 420 and taxonomy elements associated with that summary for the authority may additionally be shown such as at 430. As shown in FIG. 4, an exemplary legal system form, additional information for the authority as well as the summary and taxonomy associations may be manipulated.

Accordingly, the user can synopsize or summarize the raw data into information relevant to that user. In an additionally envisioned embodiment, an automatic summary option may be present to synopsize or suggest a synopsis of an authority or a portion of an authority. Further, a user may use form 400 to search for authorities and their summaries.

Referring now to FIG. 5, the user may additionally search for and/or enter summary and/or authority data on a taxonomy element basis. As with FIG. 4, data so captured may be manipulated by the user.

Referring now to FIG. 6, when a user desires to retrieve information, the user may search for information in numerous ways. By way of example and not limitation, the user may elect to see all summaries the user has created and associated with one or more selected elements in taxonomy table 12 a (FIG. 2), to search the user created summaries in summary table 12 b (FIG. 2) for all instances of one or more keywords, or a combination thereof. The user may additionally elect to search authority table 22 a (FIG. 2) by keyword, including limiting searches to one or more parameters as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the database arts.

In all search situations, keywords that are generated may be displayed such as at 620 or via button 652 for a user and modified or deleted, and additional keywords entered, by users with appropriate permission. In a further embodiment, the user may elect to designate how the keywords are to be viewed for a search to produce a result. As will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the programming arts, the user query may designate certain words as required, such as by using a “+” symbol, and words to be omitted, such as by using a “−” symbol. Additionally, the user may use proximity search designators including “within sentence,” “within paragraph,” and/or “within ‘n’ words of ‘phrase’” designators. In advanced searches, a user may further be able to designate additional search conditions for one or more fields present in authority table 22 a, e.g. dates, authors, type of authority, and the like.

In an embodiment, the user may also set a threshold value for searches such as at 622 whereby a query containing a plurality of keywords for the search requires an authority or summary to possess at least that threshold of keyword occurrences to be considered a positive or relevant result. By way of example and not limitation, a user query may contain four keywords and have a threshold of fifty percent. Any summary or authority, depending on the search requested, that has at least two of the four keywords is then presented to the user as a positive or relevant search result. Others, e.g. with only one keyword, are not presented.

In an exemplary embodiment, keywords for authority table 22 a, summary table 12 b, user question/FAQ table 12 c, or combinations thereof may be generated automatically or configurably. By way of example and not limitation, when new raw data are added to authority table 22 a, the raw data may be parsed, keywords generated, and keywords entered into authority keyword table 22 b. Additionally, when a summary element or question/FAQ element is created or modified, its associated text may be parsed and keywords may be added to or replaced in the appropriate keywords table such as 12 f. Noise words may be configurably excluded from the keywords tables, e.g. common words such as “this,” “that,” with “of,” “the,” and a.

Additionally, when new raw data are added to authority table 22 a (FIG. 2) or when new elements are added into user question/FAQ table 12 c (FIG. 2), the generated keywords may be used to suggest one or more taxonomy categorizations to the user. By way of example and not limitation, software executing at user computer 10,30,50 (FIG. 1) may receive notice that a new entry has been added to authority table 22 a (FIG. 2). That software may gather the keywords associated with the new element of authority table 22 a (FIG. 2) and then, using the user's taxonomy table 12 a (FIG. 2), gather keywords associated by the user with that user taxonomy table 12 a (FIG. 2) such as on an element by element basis. For each element in the taxonomy, the software can determine if those keywords are also present in the new authority's entry at or above a predetermined, configurable threshold. If so, the software can suggest that the newly entered authority is appropriate for the user with respect to that taxonomy category and additionally allow the user to view the authority and create new summaries.

When a query uncovers no results meeting the search criteria, a user may invoke an Internet browser or other communications interface, either native to the system such as in a window or external to the system such as a second application, and access other sources of authority data. If data are found in the new source, the data may be captured into authority table 22 a (FIG. 2) in accordance with the teachings of these inventions. Additionally, a user may optionally capture merely the reference to the data, e.g. a URL.

In some embodiments, a natural language query section may be present, e.g. at 610. In other currently contemplated embodiments, question area 610 may be linked to user question/FAQ table 12 c (FIG. 2). In such embodiments, users who may not have access to the system of the present invention may submit questions and users with access may review each question submitted and select from the summaries uncovered those which the querying user thinks relevant to the question asked. These relevant entries may then be associated with the user question, such as with button 651. By way of example and not limitation, a non-querying user may submit a question to be researched such as via e-mail and a querying user research the question and provide an answer back to the non-querying user.

Referring now to FIG. 7, in an additionally contemplated embodiment, a further exemplary form is shown at 700 to allow further manipulation of questions and their answers. Such as those captured into user question/FAQ table 12 c. The answer to the question may be edited by a user with appropriate access permission such as in answer box 710.

By way of further example and not limitation, when viewing the search results that used summary table 12 b as the source of the search, in an exemplary embodiment the user may select the summary created such as with the form in FIG. 6 such as by double-clicking the mouse on the summary or selecting an appropriate command button or other equivalent method and be presented with the raw data from which the summary was derived. Such selection may invoke an editor to allow the user to redact the selected summaries into a more specific, targeted, and/or otherwise tailored response to the question posed.

In an further currently envisioned alternate embodiment, Internet browser functionality may be accessible from a user perspective to present the interface such as discussed above in FIG. 3 through FIG. 7. By way of example and not limitation, a user selectable option may be present to invoke one or more functions from within a browser. In additionally contemplated embodiments, one or more functions of the user front-end may be integratable into an Internet browser as plug-in. By way of example and not limitation, using HTML, a user interface may provide a “front end” through which a user accesses the system, e.g. accesses its databases and/or communicates with the system operators. In certain embodiments, the user interface may be the only conduit between the user and the system.

In a preferred embodiment that comprises an Internet browser, locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information may be accomplished where the information itself is organized in files that are stored local to a computer, accessible via a local area network, and/or accessible via a wide area network such as, in the preferred embodiment, the Internet.

As discussed above, user creates a taxonomy, which is a description of how the user wishes to categorize various information, preferably arranged hierarchically. One such exemplary taxonomy is illustrated in FIG. 3. By way of example, in addition to the taxonomies discussed above, a user can create a hierarchically arranged taxonomy similar to an organization scheme used by a magazine or newspaper, e.g. taxonomy elements for news, sports, advertisements, business, law, and so on. The creation of the taxonomy or any of its components may occur before or during use of the systems and methods described herein.

Referring now to FIG. 10, screen display 1030, referred to herein below as main screen 1030, is an initially “blank” display area, similar in concept to the MICROSOFT® WINDOWS® desktop or any current Internet browser application. In an embodiment, the user creates and places one or more tabbed display pages 1020 onto main screen 1030. In a further embodiment, tabbed display pages 1020 are created or destroyed automatically upon the addition or deletion of elements from a user defined taxonomy, e.g. 350 (FIG. 3). The actual number of tabbed display pages 1020 to be displayed at a single time will depend on various decisions and parameters not relevant to these inventions, e.g. screen display size and user preference.

Each tabbed display page 1020 is a “container” for keepers 1100 (FIG. 11), which are visual or non-visual objects associated with that tabbed display page 1020, e.g. in a preferred embodiment, representation 1021, link 1022, text 1023, or links to other tabbed display pages 1020 (shown as tab links 1028). In an embodiment, each keeper 1100 is associated with a unique keeper data structure 1101 (FIG. 11) which is stored in a data store, e.g. as table 11110 associated with either first portion 200 or second portion 300 of database 22 (FIG. 2). This exemplary table comprises records having at least one field to store link 1102 to a computer data file or another keeper data structure. Link 1102 can be a key index field, a pointer to another structure, text information such as a URL or file folder descriptor, or the like. Additionally, the exemplary record has a field containing description 1103 of an image displayable on a predetermined tabbed display page 1020. Description 1103 may be a textual description of the computer data file such as may be created by the user or programmatically, a visual representation of or further link to contents of its associated computer data file, a displayable element not directly linked to the computer data file such as a user or programmatically selected icon, a link to another keeper data structure, or the like. The exemplary record will further comprise a field containing link 1104 to a member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy such as a key index value related to one or more records in taxonomy table 12 a (FIG. 2). Each keeper record may further comprise its own key index field 1105.

Because each tabbed display page 1020 may contain other tabbed display pages 1020, users can “drill down” or “drill up,” i.e. use tabbed display pages 1020 to view hierarchically organized file information. As described herein, the actual hierarchical organization is created by the user. In a preferred embodiment, each tabbed display page 1020 may be positioned independently within main screen 1030 by the user. Alternatively, tabbed display pages 1020 may be tiled, stacked, minimized, or maximized, as the user desires. In an embodiment, maximizing one tabbed display page 1020 allocates the remainder of tabbed display pages 1020 to a predetermined position, e.g. to a side of main screen 1030 such as by making only their tabs 1027 visible on that side of main screen 1030.

Representation 1021 is a representation of a file such as hypertext markup language (HTML) files common on the Internet, e.g. a so-called thumbnail. In this manner, a user can get a sense of the contents of the file or its data represented by representation 1021. In an embodiment, capture of information related to a file as representation 1021 simultaneously associates retrieval information for that file with representation 1021, e.g. a file locator such as a URL or disk directory reference as described herein. In other contemplated embodiments, sufficient information to describe the file is also captured, e.g. raw data as defined above such as the text portion of the file such as the text portion of an HTML file, user entered keywords, or the like, or a combination thereof.

A user may use a mouse click or otherwise select representation 1021 to retrieve the file or raw data associated with representation 1021. In an embodiment, if a version of the file associated with representation 1021 has changed, i.e. its current contents as periodically and/or dynamically accessed differ from the cached contents, a visual indicator may be present and associated with that representation 1021, e.g. color change, halo or other border, or other visual indicator.

Additionally, as tabbed display page 1020 is sized, e.g. by a user or programmatically, its associated components such as representations 1021 may also be proportionally sized within tabbed display page 1020 as well.

Link 1022 is a textual representation of a file locator such as a universal resource locator (URL) or disk directory entry. A user may create the text, e.g. “FRED'S FILES,” or the text may be associated with the link itself, e.g. www.kptools.com/fredfile.htm. In an embodiment, link 1022 may be further associated with search information for that file associated with link 1022, i.e. information sufficient to describe the file is also captured, e.g. the text portion of the file such as the text portion of an HTML file, user entered keywords, or the like, or a combination thereof. The process and data stores may be similar if not identical to those described above, e.g. illustrated at FIGS. 1 and 2. A user may use a mouse click or otherwise select link 1022 to retrieve the file or raw data associated with link 1022, e.g. authority data captured into authority table 22 a (FIG. 2).

Non-data associated text 1023 may be entered anywhere on tabbed display page 1020 by a user to aid the user in determining use of tabbed display page 1020, e.g. explanatory text such as a description of representation 1021 or link 1022, an icon, or the like, or a combination thereof.

In the operation of an exemplary embodiment, referring now to FIG. 8, a user creates a taxonomy to the user's liking at step 800. The user taxonomy is stored in user taxonomy table 12 a. The taxonomy is free-form, and as shown in FIG. 3, in the currently preferred embodiment may be organized and presented as a linked list presenting a tree structure as will be familiar to those who use Microsoft WINDOWS® software such as the file manager interface. In other currently envisioned embodiments, user taxonomy table 12 a may be organized in any manner that allows multiple levels of associations between an element and other elements in that table 12 a and may be presented to the user in numerous ways as will be familiar to those of ordinary kill in the computer arts, by way of example and not limitation including as folders and trees.

Category elements in taxonomy table 12 a are left up to a user with adequate permission to create, modify, or delete those members and can therefore reflect the categorizations and associations desired by a user individually. Although user taxonomy tables 12 a may be shared among groups of users, each user can possess their own user taxonomy table 12 a.

When creating or manipulating the taxonomy, in certain embodiments a user may additionally designate branches of the taxonomy, e.g. categories, as being associated, such as by being either equivalent or related. One element or “branch” can be equivalent to and/or related to multiple other elements or “branches.” The user can then use a single taxonomy table 12 a but dynamically switch to an alternate presentation of the taxonomy encompassed in that taxonomy table 12 a, such as by designating a category or branch as the temporary root of an alternate presentation of the taxonomy. By way of example and not limitation, a user may have categories as shown in Table 1 below for money:

TABLE 1 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 LEVEL4 US currency paper coin Copper Silver credits CANADA currency paper coin Copper Silver Gold

If the branch “us\currency” has been set to be equivalent to the branch “canada\currency,” a dynamic alternate presentation may appear as shown in Table 2:

TABLE 2 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 LEVEL4 Currency paper US + CANADA coin Copper US + CANADA Silver US + CANADA Gold CANADA credits US

Alternatively, if the “us\currency\coin” branch is set to be equivalent to the “canada\currency\coin” branch, a further dynamic alternate presentation may appear as shown in Table 3:

TABLE 3 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 coin Copper US + CANADA Silver US + CANADA Gold CANADA

If the “us\currency\coin” branch is set as related to the “canada\currency\coin” branch, a further dynamic alternate presentation may appear as shown in Table 4:

TABLE 4 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 LEVEL4 coin US Copper US Silver US CANADA Copper CANADA Silver CANADA Gold CANADA

As a further illustrative example, the following taxonomy as shown in Table 5 may be created by a user:

TABLE 5 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 LEVEL4 engines Manufacturer1 gas 4 6 8 diesel 8 Manufacturer2 gas 4 6 8 10 Diesel 8

If the user designates “Manufacturer1\gas” as equivalent to “Manufacturer2\gas,” a dynamic alternate presentation may appear as shown in Table 6:

TABLE 6 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 Gas 4 Manufacturer1 + Manufacturer2 6 Manufacturer1 + Manufacturer2 8 Manufacturer1 + Manufacturer2 10 Manufacturer2

Similarly, if the user designates “Manufacturer1\gas” as related to “Manufacturer2\gas,” a dynamic alternate presentation may appear as shown in Table 7:

TABLE 7 LEVEL1 LEVEL2 LEVEL3 Gas 4 Manufacturer1 Manufacturer2 6 Manufacturer1 Manufacturer2 8 Manufacturer1 Manufacturer2 10 Manufacturer2

In all of these examples above; the initial taxonomy table 12 a will not be altered by these alternative presentations. However, using these dynamic alternate presentations, the user can enter data and/or summaries in one category, e.g. “engines\manufacturer1\gas\4” and be able to search and retrieve information from that category when investigating a class of similar categories, e.g. 4 cylinder gasoline engines in general.

An exemplary embodiment for a legal environment will now be described. Users may create their taxonomy in the manner identified above. There is no predefined taxonomy required. Thus, a lawyer concerned with intellectual property may create a taxonomy that describes patent, trademark, anti-trust, trade secret, and copyright categories. A legal researcher concerned with real estate law may create a taxonomy that describes real property, personal property, government regulations, and contracts where contracts has further subcategory layers for sales and leases and government regulations has subcategories encompassing environmental law.

Case law, statutory law, contracts, opinions, regulations, and the like may be captured 810, such as through the Internet, into authority table 22 a. Many of these files are available through court or other governmental sites and are in the public domain and other such documents may be available without copyright restriction. The user may additionally manually capture the relevant authority identifier 812, e.g. the volume/reporter/page/court/date information, or such information may be automatically or programmatically derived.

Once the raw data are captured and the description of the source of raw data obtained, these data may then be associatively stored in their respective tables 824, e.g. authority table 22 a.

Once captured, the user may then retrieve the raw data 826 and create one or more summaries 830, if so desired, as described herein above. Because the categories are embodied in a user modifiable taxonomy table 12 a, users are free to organize their summarization as they wish, in a manner and with a layout helpful to that specific user. Further, as the user portion 300 may be separate from the backend portion 200, users may freely create different user portions 300 without impacting other users' use of the backend portion 200 authority table 22 a. If a taxonomy entry does not exist 832 that adequately categorizes the summary created by the user, according to the user's wishes, the user may create a new taxonomy entry 833. The user may then associate the summary with the desired taxonomy entry 834 and with the raw data from which the summary was derived 838.

Control to access of all or portions of database 22 or any of its functions including access to and manipulation of backend portion 200 or user portion 300 may be achieved by numerous methods as will be familiar to those of ordinary skill in the database and programming arts, by way of example and not limitation including password logins, cookies, and the like, or combinations thereof.

By way of further example and not limitation, the present inventions may be used in conjunction with other free or for-fee services, such as those available through the Internet 100, such as by being a front end to those other services. Acting as an intermediary, the present inventions allow users to contain and refine knowledge and references uncovered during prior searches and integrate new information into the user's captured knowledge and references. By way of example and not limitation, in this manner a user may continue to use services such as LEXIS/NEXIS® offered by REID ELSEVIER, INC. or WESTLAW® offered by THE THOMSON GROUP but not be required to utilize the taxonomies used by those services. Similarly, users may access search engines available through the Internet 100 such as YAHOO® or GOOGLE® which either have their own taxonomy or offer no taxonomy, and integrate information uncovered with those search into the user's captured knowledge and references.

Referring now to FIG. 9, once created, users may freely search 840 either their own user portion 300 or authority table 22 a or both using simple, word-oriented queries or any other query available to the user through database 22, by way of example and not limitation including latent semantic indexing. In a distributed environment, a user query could be communicated to server 30 executing a query handler, and results messaged back to the user query handler.

These searches may be retained such as by capturing relevant search results 842 and the retained results further edited 844 if desired.

Referring generally to FIGS. 11-13, in a preferred embodiment using the novel Internet browser user interface, a user initiates a session, e.g. FIG. 4. Tabs 1027 appear at a predetermined portion of main screen 1030, e.g. on a side. Each tab 1027 is associated with a predetermined element of a user taxonomy such as illustrated at 350 in FIG. 3. In an embodiment, tabbed display pages 1020 may be relegated by the user to any side (top, right, bottom, or left) or portion of main screen 1030. In a currently contemplated embodiment, tabs 1027 may also be configured, e.g. by a user or programmatically, to appear at any side (top, right, bottom, or left) or portion of their associated tabbed display page 1020. At least one tabbed display page 1020 may be disassociated with a user taxonomy (i.e., a null member or no member at all) and function as any other general purpose Internet browser page (FIG. 13).

If a user places or otherwise navigates, e.g. with an external Internet browser or a computer operating system utility such as the MICROSOFT® WINDOWS® EXPLORER or a general tabbed display page 1020, to a computer data file or Internet webpage the user wishes to associate into the system, the user can merely place a mouse cursor over the display on main screen 1030 of that file and drag-and-drop, as those terms are readily understood by those of skill in these arts, to any tabbed display page 1020. This automatically associates that file with that tab 1027, i.e. provides a path such as “C:\Folder\File.doc” or “www.kptools.com” and a link to its associated user taxonomy element. This creates a link by which that file may be retrieved and associates the link with tab 1027 and its associated user taxonomy element. Alternatively, the user can associate the file with a plurality of tabs by use of keys or other common techniques, e.g. use of a CTRL-key combination with the mouse and a form such as illustrated at FIG. 3. In a further alternative, the user can select a menu option to retrieve a hierarchical representation of the user's taxonomy (e.g., FIG. 3), and then associate the file with one or more entries in the user taxonomy.

Referring now to FIG. 11, by way of example and not limitation, a user can set up a series of tabbed display pages 1020 to approximate a general interest magazine structure, e.g. tabbed display pages 1020 corresponding to national news, local news, international news, entertainment, sports, legal issues, advertisements and auctions, searches, and the like. Thus, main screen 1030 will present a more-or-less familiar navigation landscape to the user in which files, whether local or Internet based, will be organized and presented in a fashion that is logical to that general interest magazine structure. As the user utilizes the system and methods described and claimed herein, further refinement may be made, e.g. a “national news” tabbed display page 1020 may itself contain a further tabbed display page 1020 for accessing national news commentaries, a further tabbed display page 1020 for accessing so-call BLOGs, a further tabbed display page 1020 for accessing Internet web pages associated with national broadcast media, and the like. Such an organization, shown in the table below, would then be presented to the user in a more-or-less familiar setting, each with its own tabbed paged 20:

TABLE 8 NEWS NATIONAL NEWS STATE NEWS LOCAL NEWS ENTERTAINMENT MOVIES CURRENT ARCHIVES MUSIC SPORTS BASKETBALL BASEBALL PRO COLLEGE LEGAL ISSUES ADVERTISEMENTS AND AUCTIONS SEARCHES

Although tabbed display pages 1020 illustrated and discussed herein may be part of the authority management and retrieval system and methods also described herein, it is understood that tabbed display pages 1020 and their methods of use may also be embodied in a standalone browser. As with the other software described herein, such functionality may be written in any appropriate language such as C, C+, C++, C#, Java, Visual Basic, Visual Foxpro, or the like, or a combination thereof.

In certain contemplated embodiments, computer data files that are associated are also captured as raw data into authority table 22 a (FIG. 2). In this manner, these computer data files are then available to be accessed and manipulated as described herein, e.g. summarized and/or made part of any further search involving other authorities. However, all other such authorities, i.e. those not captured into the system via the browser interface, may not be viewable via tabbed display pages 1020.

In a further embodiment, the user may be presented with a search form similar to FIG. 6 or use search entry box 1032 from which search criteria are obtained from the user. The user may then be allowed to select one or more tabbed display pages 1020 to use during a search, including all such tabbed display pages 1020. Computer accessible files associated with the selected tabbed display pages 1020 are then search for those computer accessible files that satisfy the obtained search criteria. This may occur in a manner similar to the search methods described above.

It is expressly understood that although the exemplary embodiments above have been described in terms of multiple tables, whether free tables or database tables, numerous equivalent structures, table definitions, and database definitions exist which will be equivalent to the structure, table definitions, and database definitions above. It is also expressly understood that although the exemplary embodiments above have been described in terms of a legal search system, the present inventions are not limited to legal searches.

It will be understood that various changes in the details, materials, and arrangements of the parts which have been described and illustrated above in order to explain the nature of this invention may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the principle and scope of the invention as recited in the following claims. 

1. A method of organizing and retrieving information regarding raw data stored on a local or remote data store, comprising: a. providing access to raw data to a computer system user, the raw data comprising at least one of (i) a text data file, (ii) a graphics data file, (iii) an audio data file, (iv) a video data file, (v) a universal resource locator (URL) associated with the raw data, or (vi) a link to a data file associated with raw data, the raw data further being stored at least one of (i) locally to a computer being used by the computer system user or (ii) remotely from the computer being used by the computer system user; b. providing software comprising a user interface in the computer being used by the computer system user; c. capturing a description of the raw data in an authority table associated with a user searchable database accessible to the computer system user, the description comprising a path to access the raw data; d. associating the raw data with a user definable taxonomy; e. associating a keeper data structure with the raw data; f. associating the keeper data structure with a predetermined portion of a displayable computer screen, each predetermined portion being associated with a predetermined portion of the user definable taxonomy; g. storing sufficient information into the keeper data structure to describe an viewable link to the keeper data structure, the raw data associated with the keeper data structure, and the user definable taxonomy associated with the keeper data structure; and h. performing a predetermined operation on the associated raw when the viewable link is selected by the user.
 2. A system for locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information, comprising: a. a computer having a display; b. a data store, operatively in communication with the computer, the data store comprising: i. hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy data; and ii. data displayable as a plurality of tabbed display pages on the display, the data for each tabbed display page linked to a taxonomy member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy data; c. a keeper data structure stored in the data store, the keeper data structure further comprising: i. a link to at least one of (a) a computer data file or (b) another keeper data structure; ii. a description of an image displayable within a tabbed display page, the image comprising at least one of (a) a visual representation of contents of the computer data file, (b) a textual description of the computer data file, (c) a displayable element not directly linked to the computer data file, or (d) a visual representation of another keeper data structure; and iii. a link to a taxonomy member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy data; d. a keeper associated with a predetermined tabbed display page of the plurality of tabbed display pages and with a keeper data structure; and e. software resident in and executable within the computer, the software adapted to: i. allow a user to associate a predetermined computer data file with the keeper data structure; ii. display the description of the image within the predetermined tabbed display page of the plurality of tabbed display pages; and iii. retrieve the file associated with a selected keeper data structure upon selection of the description of the image within the predetermined tabbed display page of the plurality of tabbed display pages by the user.
 3. The system of claim 2, wherein the computer is at least one of (i) a standalone personal computer, (ii) a personal computer having access to a local area network, or (iii) a personal computer having access to a wide area network.
 4. The system of claim 2, wherein a predetermined visual characteristic of the displayed image within the predetermined tabbed display page of the plurality of tabbed display pages dynamically changes in response to at least one of (i) a sizing of the keeper within the predetermined tabbed display page of the plurality of tabbed display pages, (ii) a sizing of the predetermined tabbed display page of the plurality of tabbed display pages, or (iii) a change in the contents of the computer data file associated with the keeper data structure associated with the keeper.
 5. The system of claim 2, wherein textual description of a file is at least one of (i) a universal resource locator (URL) text, (ii) a file/path descriptor to access a predetermined file for a predetermined operating system, or (iii) a link to a further file descriptor.
 6. The system of claim 2, wherein the displayable element not associated with the computer data file is user created text that is positioned at least one of (i) fixed in relative display position to other elements displayed in the tabbed display page or (ii) not fixed in relative display position to other elements displayed in the tabbed display page.
 7. A method of locating, categorizing, storing, and retrieving information, comprising: a. providing access to a computer system as claimed in claim 2; b. defining a path to a computer accessible file; c. associating the computer accessible file with a taxonomy member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; d. creating a keeper data structure; e. storing sufficient information into the keeper data structure to describe its associated computer accessible file, the path to the computer accessible file, its associated user definable taxonomy, and a description of an image displayable on a predetermined tabbed display page; and f. associating the keeper with the created keeper data structure; g. associating the keeper with the tabbed display page plurality of tabbed display pages associated with the member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; and h. displaying the image within the display boundaries of the tabbed display page.
 8. The method of claim 7, wherein the image comprises at least one of (i) a static image, (ii) a dynamic image, (iii) a text link, or (iv) a thumbnail.
 9. The method of claim 7, wherein associating the computer accessible file with the taxonomy member of the user definable taxonomy further comprises associating the computer accessible file with at least one of (i) no member of the user taxonomy, (ii) a single member of the user taxonomy, or (iii) a plurality of substantially simultaneously selected taxonomy members of the user taxonomy.
 10. The method of claim 9, for substantially simultaneously associations with selected plurality of members of the user taxonomy, further comprising: a. associating the computer accessible file with each of the selected plurality of members of the user taxonomy; and b. associating a separate keeper data structure with the computer accessible file for each of the plurality of members of the user taxonomy.
 11. The method of claim 7, further comprising capturing into the keeper data structure at least one of (i) text data from the computer accessible file, (ii) graphics data from the computer accessible file, (iii) audio data from the computer accessible file, (iv) video data from the computer accessible file, or (v) a reference to the computer accessible file.
 12. The method of claim 7, further comprising: a. creating a tabbed display page if one does not exist that is associated with the member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; and b. associated the created tabbed display page with the member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy.
 13. The method of claim 7, further comprising: a. presenting the user with a search form; b. obtaining search criteria from the user via the search form; c. allowing the user to select one or more tabbed display pages; and d. searching computer accessible files associated with the selected tabbed display pages for those computer accessible files that satisfy the obtained search criteria.
 14. The method of claim 7, further comprising: a. automatically creating a keeper when a user associated a computer data file with a member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; and b. automatically associating the keeper with a tabbed display page associated with the member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy.
 15. The method of claim 7, wherein: a. a tabbed display page associated with a parent element in the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy further comprises a link to tabbed display pages that are logically beneath and associated with its element in the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; and b. a tabbed display page associated with a child element in the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy further comprises a link to tabbed display pages that are logically above and associated with its element in the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy.
 16. The method of claim 15, further comprising: a. providing the user with a display of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; b. allowing the user to select a desired member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy from the displayed hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy; and c. displaying the tabbed display page associated with the selected member of the hierarchically organized user definable taxonomy.
 17. The method of claim 7, further comprising performing a predetermined operation on the associated computer accessible file when the keeper data structure is selected by the user.
 18. The method of claim 17, wherein performing a predetermined operation on the associated computer accessible file when the keeper data structure selected by the user further comprises: a. accessing the associated computer accessible file; b. retrieving the associated computer accessible file if it exists; and c. performing a predetermined operation on the retrieved associated computer accessible file.
 19. The method of claim 18, wherein the predetermined operation comprises at least one of (i) displaying the retrieved associated computer accessible file or (ii) invoking a further software application to act on the retrieved associated computer accessible file.
 20. The method of claim 7, further comprising: a. periodically comparing selective information in the keeper data structure against corresponding selective information about its associated computer accessible file; and b. changing a mutatable characteristic of the keeper data structure when the corresponding selective information about the associated computer accessible file changes. 